Sean Hoare (c. 1963 – c. 17 July 2011)[1] was a British entertainment journalist. He contributed to articles on show business, from actors to reality television stars.[2] He played a central role in contributing to exposing the News International phone hacking scandal.

Contents

Hoare was described as by The Guardian's Nick Davies as "coming from a working-class background of solid Arsenal supporters, always voted Labour, defined himself specifically as a 'clause IV' socialist who still believed in public ownership of the means of production."[3] Hoare was a trainee reporter in the 1980s for the Watford Observer.[4]

He was a reporter for The Sun before joining The Sunday People, under editor Neil Wallis.[3] He moved to the News of the World in June 2001,[5] under editor Rebekah Brooks (then Rebekah Wade) but was sacked in 2005 by then editor Andy Coulson for drink and drug problems.[6][7] He said in regard to his drug taking while employed by the News of the World, "I was paid to go out and take drugs with rock stars – get drunk with them, take pills with them, take cocaine with them. It was so competitive. You are going to go beyond the call of duty. You are going to do things that no sane man would do. You're in a machine."[3] He claims to have often taken "three grammes of cocaine a day, spending about £1,000 a week" and would drink Jack Daniel's, and then would snort a line of cocaine as part of a "rock star's breakfast".[3] His health deteriorated to the point that the doctor examining his liver remarked that he "must be dead".[3] A former colleague said, "if you could imagine the stereotypical image of News of the World hack, it would be he."[7]

In 2001, Hoare was awarded a Shafta Award (celebrating "the very worst in tabloid journalism")[8] for his scoop on David and Victoria Beckham's purchase of an island off the Essex coast;[9][10] the story, which turned out to be fiction,[10] also won him the 20th anniversary "Shafta of Shaftas" in 2006.[8] He won another Shafta in 2002,[11] two in 2003,[12] and a lifetime achievement Shafta in 2004.[13]

In September 2010 Scotland Yard reopened its 2006 phone-hacking case[14] against News of the World and Andy Coulson, following a New York Times Magazine piece published that month in which Hoare told reporters Don Van Natta, Jo Becker and Graham Bowley that Coulson had "actively encouraged" him to hack phones.[15][16][17] Hoare had once been a close friend of Coulson.[6] Following his statements for The New York Times Hoare was interviewed by Scotland Yard officers "under criminal caution," meaning that his statements could be used against him in possible future prosecution.[16] Hoare had said of the phone hacking at the News of the World: "It was always done in the language of, 'Why don't you practise some of your dark arts on this', which was a metaphor for saying, 'Go and hack into a phone'. Such was the culture of intimidation and bullying that you would do it because you had to produce results. And, you know, to stand up in front of a Commons committee and say, 'I was unaware of this under my watch' was wrong."[7]

Hoare failed to return phone calls to his home in the week after his dinner with New York Times reporters.[19] He was found dead at his home in Langley Road, Watford, Hertfordshire, at around 11 am on 18 July 2011.[6] A friend and neighbour described him as "physically going downhill" in recent weeks and paranoid that "someone from the Government [was] coming to get him."[23] On the same day and within hours of his body being found, Hertfordshire Police stated that his death was "unexplained" but not suspicious,[24][25] and that it could take weeks to establish a cause of death.[26] On 21 July, Hoare's widow issued a statement in which she said that his death had come as a "tremendous shock".[27] The inquest into his death noted the irreversible damage caused to Hoare's liver by his alcoholism and his return to drinking brought about by the resurgence of media interest in the phone hacking scandal in December 2010. It ruled he died from natural causes.[28]